All forex CFDs involve a currency pair. For example, AUD/USD involves the Australian dollar and the US dollar, while EUR/USD is the symbol of the Euro and US dollar.

What does the symbol mean? The first abbreviation is the base currency, which is the currency you buy. The second is the quote currency, which is the one you sell.
For example, if you see AUD/USD 0.7200, it means you can purchase $1 Australian with $0.72 US.

One of the advantages of CFDs is that it is possible to go long or short on a currency pair. If you go long, you buy the base currency. However, if you go short, you will buy the quote currency (and profit if the base currency goes down in value).



Frequently Ask Question
When you start trading, it is a good idea to limit your use of leverage until you are confident in your strategies and able to properly employ risk management tools.
The concept is slightly more complicated if you have open positions. In these cases, the equity is the balance plus the profit or minus the loss of your current trades. Therefore, your equity can change minute by minute.
If you use leverage with a 1:10 margin requirement and have an open position worth $10,000, you must keep $1,000 in your account. If you have $5,000 in your account, you have $4,000 in free margin. If you close the $10,000 position, the $1,000 will become part of the free margin total.
The most traded pairs on the market include EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, and AUD/USD.